Not sure I can accept a FTL expansion theory though. If c is the ultimate speed limit then entropy ought to override long before expansion rates are that high. I find the whole expansion business to be a trifle odd to begin with. If the universe (space-time) is expanding, then all material objects should be expanding proportionately with the underlying fabric. Therefore, our yardsticks ought to be incapable of detecting the expansion.
Not sure I can accept a FTL expansion theory though. If c is the ultimate speed limit then entropy ought to override long before expansion rates are that high.
I find the whole expansion business to be a trifle odd to begin with. If the universe (space-time) is expanding, then all material objects should be expanding proportionately with the underlying fabric. Therefore, our yardsticks ought to be incapable of detecting the expansion.
On a personal note, I attend the Origins conference early this year at Arizona State. It had a stunning set of attendees: Hawking (who was sick and only sent a video), Pinker, Dawkins, Venter, Krauss, Greene, Johanson, a shovel-full of Nobel-laureates, and public figures like Neil Tyson, Carl Segan's daughter, etc..
Quote from: QwazyWabbit on October 05, 2009, 09:50:51 AMNot sure I can accept a FTL expansion theory though. If c is the ultimate speed limit then entropy ought to override long before expansion rates are that high. I find the whole expansion business to be a trifle odd to begin with. If the universe (space-time) is expanding, then all material objects should be expanding proportionately with the underlying fabric. Therefore, our yardsticks ought to be incapable of detecting the expansion.That's something I did wonder about.There was an open mic afterward for a question/answer period. I wanted to ask about FTL expansion, but, I felt I was too newbie to formulate my question intelligently.